The document discusses generational differences in the workplace, focusing on Millennials born between 1977-1995. It provides background on Millennial characteristics, notes they will soon make up the majority of the workforce, and discusses how companies can better manage and recruit Millennial employees through mentorship, flexible schedules, and emphasizing meaningful work. Examples are given of companies like the U.S. Army, Deloitte, and Merrill Lynch that have adapted their management styles to be more effective with Millennial workers.
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Managing millenials
1. Workforce Millennials Confident, forward-thinking, and 80 million strong, Generation Y will reshape the workplace. Hereâs how to get the best out of your youngest workers. http://www.bnet.com/feature/managing-millennials/202082
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8. How to Talk About Millennials Helicopter Parent: Parents who hover over their millennial offspring. Acting on the notion that they know best and can help their children make decisions, Helicopter Parents hope to prevent their kids from making missteps. Black Hawk: A Helicopter Parent who goes to unethical lengths to help his/her child. A dad who helps write his kidâs college application essay is a Black Hawk. Trophy Children: Children driven to succeed in part to please their parentsâ need for elevated status and bragging rights. Boomeranging: The act of children moving back into their parentsâ homes after graduating from college. Parents often welcome their millennial children back into the house. The children are sorely missed and get the opportunity to squirrel away money for a down payment on a house or to start a business.
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15. U.S. Army The Challenge: Command-and-control management is a non-starter with Gen Y The Solution: Lead by example Five years ago, U.S. Army drill sergeants won respect the old-fashioned way: through fear and intimidation. When a bus of newbie âfuture soldiersâ pulled up, the waiting drill sergeant immediately screamed orders, created chaos, and instilled fear. Problem was, the rate of recruits leaving during basic training had ballooned to 10 percent. âWe might have gotten away with more of that negative atmosphere with previous generations,â says Jim Schwitters, the commanding general at the U.S. Army Training Center in Fort Jackson, S.C. âNow we know thatâs generally not the best starting point.â Schwitters slowed the hemorrhaging of new recruits by instilling a management method that millennials understand: lead by example. Helping to rewrite Army training regulation 350-6, which embodies the military divisionâs training doctrine, Schwitters wanted drill sergeants behaving more like mentors and less like, well, drill sergeants. He says the time was ripe to make some of the militaryâs newest soldiers, whom nowadays can see action in Iraq just six months after enlisting, feel empowered from the get-go. Today the first challenge that new recruits face is a âconfidence obstacle courseâ thatâs tough but empowering because itâs not overwhelming in its difficulty. The drill sergeants then do virtually everything they ask their soldiers to do â from navigating obstacle courses to marching with heavy backpacks to properly handling a rifle. The mentoring has worked, and attrition among new recruits has dropped nearly 50 percent. âWhen I ask a new soldier what has motivated his accomplishments, heâll frequently say, âIâve been inspired by the drill sergeants that lead me,ââ Schwitters says. âHeâll say, âThe drill sergeant cared about me and did everything that I was asked to do.ââ
16. Deloitte The Challenge: Hiring managers can be clueless about what makes millennials tick The Solution: Invest in a management-training regimen In 2004, Deloitteâs Stan Smith, a national director specializing in human resources issues, got a call from a partner who was furious at some of his young associates. Heâd assigned them some work over the weekend, and theyâd asked him to reschedule it because they already had other plans. Smith ultimately heard more such complaints, and the friction helped push Deloitte off Fortune magazineâs â100 Best Companies to Work Forâ list in both 2004 and 2006 â tough setbacks for a top companyâs HR director. Smith fought back by educating the managers instead of trying to change the young staff. âI wanted to help our leaders understand that the world they grew up in doesnât exist anymore,â he says. âThey were going to have to deal with these young peopleâs needs.â In early 2006, Smith produced and printed the first in a series of in-house educational brochures about generational changes in the workplace, filling it with think-tank research. (Example: both Gen X and Gen Y employees grew up in a consumer economy and see themselves as customers, which means they expect to inïŹuence the terms and conditions of their jobs.) Deloitteâs brass not only read the brochure, some took it home to their kids, who said the information was spot-on. Now, change is in the air. Deloitte has begun overhauling its orientation process to make it millennial-friendly, and the company has retrained its management to adjust to millennialsâ desire for flextime. As for Smithâs latest projects, heâs produced three additional brochures on the subject. His new book, Decoding Generational Differences, was distributed in-house earlier this year, and it obviously reads like a success story. Deloitte now is enjoying its second consecutive appearance on the â100 Best Companies to Work Forâ list.
17. Merrill Lynch The Challenge: Mom and Dad often come with the package The Solution: Market your company to parents, too Many millennials were raised by hyper-involved soccer moms and dads. Now, in a number of industries, HR managers report that these hovering âhelicopter parentsâ are helping their adult children negotiate pay and benefits, angle for promotions, and decide which job offers to accept. Though many HR reps initially were shocked by it, the phenomenon is now so widespread that companies are shifting gears and marketing themselves to parents as well as potential recruits. For example, when Office Depot launches its new website this summer, it will include a reassuring message to parents, an attempt to convince Mom and Dad that the company is an opportunity worthy of their progeny. The phenomenon caught the attention of Merrill Lynchâs Elton Ndoma-Ogar in 2006. A diversity recruiter for the companyâs global markets and investment banking division, Ndoma-Ogar realized that the applicants and their parents were reviewing Merrillâs job offers. For those parents who havenât worked in the industry, he says, âThey only see and hear all these horror storiesâ about long hours and tough demands. His efforts at recruiting diversity candidates were hurt, he says, because he wasnât sufficiently reducing parentsâ fears and concerns. Ndoma-Ogar responded by launching Parentsâ Day in 2006 for a select group of summer analysts working in his division. The company flies caretakers to Manhattan (parents have come from as far as Nigeria), teaches them about the business, provides a tour of the Big Apple, and emphasizes company support and benefits, such as free meals and transportation for employees working overtime. â The day provides a sense of comfort that sons and daughters are being taken care of,â he says. Still in its nascent stages (Merrill has limited the program to a small number of diversity candidates), the company is considering expanding Parentsâ Day. Last year, only one student whose parents attended the event didnât accept the firmâs subsequent job offer.
25. Additional Resources Millennials Rising: The Next Great Generation by Bill Strauss and Neil Howe. Published in 2000, this was the first broad profile of the generation. When Generations Collide by Lynne Lancaster and David Stillman. Solutions to workplace clashes based on generational differences. Managing the Generation Mix by Bruce Tulgan. A step-by-step guide to adjusting your communication and management styles for a wide span of generations. PBSâs â Generation Next â webpage. Informed by the networkâs documentaries on Millennials, the site offers a compilation of audio and video clips, as well as profiles and news stories.